During the first year or year and a half of law school, students usually study core courses, such as constitutional law, contracts, property law, torts, civil procedure, and legal writing. In the remaining time, they may choose specialized courses in fields such as tax, labor, or corporate law. Law students often gain practical experience by participating in school-sponsored legal clinics; in the school’s moot court competitions, in which students conduct appellate arguments; in practice trials under the supervision of experienced lawyers and judges; and through research and writing on legal issues for the school’s law journals.
"The power of the lawyer is in the uncertainty of the law."
-Jeremy Bentham
sounds hard work
ReplyDeleteWhat if you pick a topic and love it in school but get out into the world and find out application of that field of law SUCKS... can you change?
ReplyDeleteLaw is such a massive subject specialisation must be necessary.
ReplyDeleteand i bet they cost a crapload of money
ReplyDeletewhere do you find these quotes?
ReplyDeleteYay, school?
ReplyDeletecorporate law interests me, I nkow what I'd read :)
ReplyDeleteInteresting post. Keep em coming.
ReplyDeleteI'm a journalism major and I had to take Journalism Law. Fun course actually.
ReplyDeletewow, another inspiring post, great work man cant wait for tomorrows post !
ReplyDeleteIts probably usefull to work part time in a law firm first to check out if its made for you.. before applying for law school which can be really expensive!
ReplyDeletei LOVE the quote at the bottom of every post. it makes every post all the more interesting!
ReplyDelete